“Currently, no new orders have been issued which impact the progression of the conditions-based drawdown expected to reach 2,500 (troops) by January 15, 2021,” the Department of Defense said on Monday, according to Reuters.
The Pentagon’s move will likely stir outrage among Republican and Democratic lawmakers opposed to further troop cuts and renew concerns about the Trump administration’s disdain for Congress, even in its final days.
“If they are continuing the drawdown, that would be a violation of the law,” Reuters cited a congressional aide, who asked not to be named, as saying.
The US invaded Afghanistan in October 2001 under the pretext of the so-called war on terror, overthrowing a Taliban regime.
Since the US invasion of Afghanistan, Washington has spent more than two trillion dollars waging the war on the impoverished country. Over 2,400 American soldiers and tens of thousands of Afghan civilians have been killed.
The US military’s phased withdrawal from Afghanistan is part of a deal signed between the US and Taliban in February 2020, which apparently aims to end the almost two-decade war in Afghanistan.
Under the deal, the Taliban have agreed to halt their attacks on international forces.
The deal was intended to result in the reduction of bloodshed, but violence continues to take a heavy toll in the country.
A report said last year that Taliban bombings and other assaults had increased by 70 percent after the US-Taliban agreement.